Her Sister Claimed the Groom’s Baby, Then the Screens Turned On-Cherry - Chainityai

Her Sister Claimed the Groom’s Baby, Then the Screens Turned On-Cherry

At my wedding, my sister stood up, raised her glass, and calmly announced she was pregnant—with my husband’s child.

Two hundred guests froze.

My mother dropped her wine.

Image

My husband just laughed, squeezed my hand, and whispered, “Ready?”

I tapped the remote hidden under my napkin, and the slideshow screens behind us flickered from baby photos to something else entirely.

Within minutes, my “pregnant” sister was the one begging me to stop.

But by then, everyone had already heard enough.

The reception hall smelled like roses, buttercream, and chilled champagne.

The air-conditioning was set too low, the kind of cold that makes lace feel stiff against your skin and turns every breath into something careful.

I remember the sound of forks against china.

I remember the soft scrape of chairs.

I remember thinking that if I looked only at the candles and the flowers and the little white place cards, I could almost pretend the day had gone exactly the way I once imagined it would.

Daniel sat beside me in his navy suit, his hand warm around mine under the head table.

We had already survived the ceremony.

We had survived the photos.

We had survived my mother fussing over my veil, Daniel’s aunt crying before I even walked down the aisle, and Madison smiling in every picture as if she had not been sharpening something behind her teeth for months.

Madison was my sister, my maid of honor, and the person most people in that room assumed knew me better than anyone.

That was true in one way.

She knew where to hit.

Growing up, Madison always wanted the center of the room.

If we performed little plays in the living room, she was the princess, the queen, the singer, the one who bowed while everyone clapped.

I was the tree, the maid, the horse, or whatever role required standing quietly while she shone.

When I got a solo in the school choir in eighth grade, Madison suddenly joined the spring musical and cried for three nights until our parents called it passion instead of jealousy.

When I got into college, she told relatives at Thanksgiving that I was “book smart, not people smart.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *